Better by halves

Better by halves

A case of 12 x 750ml bottles is below the maximum carton weight approved by OSH

None of the above

If you answered “none of the above” you are correct. The real answer is that 750ml is the approximate size of a glass-blower’s lungs, or at least the size of a glassblower’s lungs when bottles were first made several hundred years ago.

Glassblowers no longer make wine bottles but, curiously, we’ve adopted their lung capacity as the standard size for wine bottles throughout the world. In most cases 750mls is a handy size. They fit easily into the fridge, they’re not too heavy, easy to pour and more often than not a 750ml bottle provides enough wine for two people during and after the evening meal. If there’s wine left over you can re-seal the bottle, place it in the fridge (do this with white and red wine) and the wine will still be pleasant to drink the following day.

Don’t be a slave to habit. There are occasions when it’s worth seeking an alternative bottle size.

BYO Halves

How often do you visit a BYO restaurant and find you have to make one bottle suit two courses for two people? The chances are if you brought a bottle of white wine neither of you will choose a red meat course for entrée or main. Think how useful it would be if you’d arrived with a half-bottle (375ml) of white and a half-bottle of red.

“Ah”, I hear you say, “the trouble with half-bottles is a lack of choice and the fact that we’re forced to pay a premium price for them.” Not if you make your own. Try this.

Buy a couple of half-bottles sealed with a screwcap. Kumeu River Sauvignon Blanc $11 (tastings), Chardonnay $18.50 (tastings) and Pinot Gris $14 (tastings) are all available from the winery in half-bottles (phone 09-412 8415). When I visited recently they were selling half-bottles of a very palatable 2005 Sauvignon Blanc for an extremely modest $8 each.

Enjoy the contents but save the bottle and cap, carefully washing both.

When you next plan to open a 750ml bottle but only want to drink half of it, fill your clean half-bottle, re-seal it by screwing the cap tightly and use a sticky label to identify the wine.

Re-filled half-bottles will, in my experience, last for many weeks without any loss of quality.

Sherries and Stickies

Dessert wines, such as sweet botrytised Riesling, are mostly bottled in half bottles (another source of bottles for re-bottling). These wines are so intensely sweet and flavoursome that a small bottle will usually satisfy four people when served with dessert at the end of a meal.

Spain’s leading sherry producer, Lustau (tastings), now distributes many of its top wines in half bottles. If you’re not a sherry drinker buy a half-bottle of Amontillado los Arcos $22.95 (tastings) and serve with tapas for a really special treat. This dry, delicate and exquisitely nutty wine will introduce you to the pleasures of truly great sherry.

Seasoned sherry drinkers must buy a half-bottle of Manzanillo Papirusa $21.50 – a pure, fresh, bone-dry and ethereal wine with concentrated nutty flor yeast characters. Serve it chilled with olives and tapas. Keep leftovers in the fridge and drink within a week to preserve freshness.

Half-bottle bargain

Because half-bottles are not big sellers and wineries have to bottle a reasonable quantity to make them worthwhile they have the potential to become bargains. This is a terrific wine, still fresh and with typical Marlborough Sauvignon Blanc characters. Better buy a case.

Half-bottle sticky at a super price

Forrest Estate 2007 Late Harvest Marlborough Riesling (375ml) $20

A moderately sweet Riesling with lovely lime and mineral characters. Good now but will repay cellaring for a few years. Not excessively sweet. Enjoy with fresh fruit salads. – view on bobcampbell.nz

Half-bottle sensational sherry

Dry Oloroso Don Nuno (375ml) $30

Sip this remarkable, old wine as an aperitif, with tapas or consommé and after the meal in front of a roaring fire with walnuts and blue cheese. The earth may move a little. Roasted chestnut, liquorice and anise flavours. A true classic. – view on bobcampbell.nz